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Thanks for the response and suggestions, Mike,You have confirmed my fear that what is required is skill, patience, a steady hand and good eyesight. Lacking those, I guess I will have to make do with multiple attempts, 10x magnification, and bourbon to steady the nerves.
I have a couple projects I am working on that require thin stripes (2" wide in N scale, according to Microscale's label) in yellow . The difficulty is that the prototype saw fit to curve their stripes at the nose of the locomotive. The particular ones I am doing (EJ&E separator stripes) are a curve with about a 1.25" radius. Is there a recommended technique (or chemistry) to get the decals to accept a curve and lay down flat? I've tried "trial and error" and gotten close- but after a lot of poking and prodding to get the decal into place, the decals either come apart, or I get poor adhesion and they pull away when they dry.Any advice greatly appreciated.
I thought that bourbon would mess up your fine hand-eye coordination, and muscle control.
@skytop35 did the decal bending magic on a C&NW streamlined steam engine one time, but it was probably 1" stripes. Somethings I'd consider:1) cut right to the stripe, and remove any extra carrier film that would be trying to keep the decal straight.2) Use a softer solution, like Microset, instead of Solvaset, so it softens but doesn't turn to goo.3) Pick and prod and guide and move, and see what happens?
Impressive work there, Bill. I will take a look for similar cowl unit stripes, but if those are not out there, I now know it can be done.Is the CNW loco brass, a heavily reworked Con-Cor streamlined Hudson, or did you just make that out of stuff lying around on the workbench? One of my other "if I ever have the time and the money" projects would be to do a GTW U4b.